What This Document Is
This is a student assignment – specifically, Part One of an outline for a Political Science (POLI 330) course at Chamberlain University. It focuses on the landmark Supreme Court case *Brown v. Louisiana* (1966) and its implications for citizen rights, particularly the right to peaceful protest. The outline was completed by Christian Wilson for Professor Kwasi Ofori-Yeboah on February 19, 2023.
Why This Document Matters
This assignment is intended for students enrolled in POLI 330 at Chamberlain University. It serves as a foundational exercise in understanding how the courts interpret and protect citizen rights, using a specific case study. It’s likely part of a larger unit on civil liberties and the First Amendment.
Common Limitations or Challenges
This is a single student’s interpretation and outline of the case. It is not a comprehensive legal brief or a substitute for the full case ruling or course materials. It represents one student’s understanding for the purposes of completing an assignment.
What This Document Provides
The document includes a summary of the facts of *Brown v. Louisiana*, the legal questions presented, the Court’s decision and holdings, and the verdict with opinions. It also offers a conclusion with the student’s personal perspective on the case’s significance for the Civil Rights Movement. References to sources used are also included. This preview does *not* include the full text of the case ruling, detailed legal arguments beyond those summarized, or any additional cases beyond *Brown v. Louisiana*.